
The Conversation Weekly The Making of an Autocrat: suppress the people
Jan 4, 2026
Lucan Way, a renowned democracy professor at the University of Toronto, explores the rise of authoritarianism through the lens of Donald Trump's tactics. He discusses how Trump’s strategies, such as silencing opposition and leveraging legal investigations, signal a dangerous shift toward competitive authoritarianism. Way emphasizes the chilling effects these tactics have on critics, as they become reluctant to challenge power. He also draws parallels with autocrats in Hungary and Russia, shedding light on the U.S.'s unique vulnerabilities and institutional resistances.
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Elected Leaders Can Erode Democracy
- Electoral autocracies can look like democracies because leaders keep elections while eroding institutions.
- Lucan A. Way calls the United States a competitive authoritarian regime when state agencies answer to the leader.
Loyalists Turn State Into A Tool
- Purging career civil servants and replacing them with loyalists gives leaders control of the state.
- Lucan A. Way says Trump rapidly installed loyalists in the DOJ and FBI to accelerate this process.
Attacking Law Firms As A Tipping Point
- Targeting law firms that represent opposition raises the cost of legal and political work.
- Way identifies Trump's actions against firms as a tipping point toward competitive authoritarianism.
